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The Antics Roadshow blog

~ Brief Descriptions of my Adventures, at Home and Abroad.

The Antics Roadshow blog

Tag Archives: Industrial Heritage

Bristol Harbour Railway, The M Shed, Bristol, 12/02/17.

04 Tuesday Apr 2017

Posted by Mr. B Flaneur in Ship Shape and Bristol Fashion.

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Tags

Bristol, Bristol Harbour Railway, Industrial Heritage, M Shed, Museums, Portbury, steam locomotive, steam railways

DSCN7631

“Portbury“, built by the Avonside Engine Company in 1917, steaming along the Bristol Harbour Railway towards the M Shed museum. According to the “working exhibits” section of the M Shed’s website:

“Portbury had a reputation for great strength and in her hey-day it was said that she could ‘pull a town down’. She also had a tendency to move off when unattended – a common problem with steam locomotives with worn parts. Thus she was usually parked between other engines in the Avonmouth shed“.

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Thankfully, it looked like Portbury was under control as the locomotive reversed!

 

Image

George Stephenson admiring a locomotive, Chesterfield Train Station, Chesterfield, 04/06/16.

01 Friday Jul 2016

Tags

Chesterfield, George Stephenson, Industrial Heritage, Industrial Revolution, railway station, railways, Station, statue, Train stations, Trains., Victorian.

DSCN6590

Posted by Mr. B Flaneur | Filed under Out and About., Uncategorized

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The Fairbairn Steam Crane, Prince’s Wharf, Bristol, 27/04/15.

22 Friday May 2015

Posted by Mr. B Flaneur in Out and About., Ship Shape and Bristol Fashion.

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Tags

Bristol, Cranes, Fairbairn Steam Crane, Floating Harbour Bristol, Industrial Heritage, Prince's Wharf Bristol, Steam Train

Featured

Also featured on this blog on the 10th August 2014: The View from The M Shed Roof, 07/08/14. 

Cooking Up A Storm, The National Fishing Heritage Centre, Grimsby, 04/04/15.

16 Thursday Apr 2015

Posted by Mr. B Flaneur in Out and About.

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Tags

cook, Cooking, fish, Fishing, galley, Grimsby, Industrial Heritage, Museums, The National Fishing Heritage Centre, trawler, Vim

Grimsby.

Image

Mending The Nets, The National Fishing Heritage Centre, Grimsby, 04/04/15.

14 Tuesday Apr 2015

Tags

Fishing, fishing industry, fishing nets, flat cap, Grimsby, Industrial Heritage, Museums, National Fishing Heritage Centre

Grimsby.

Posted by Mr. B Flaneur | Filed under Out and About.

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Souvenirs: Sticker, Scotland’s Jute Museum @ Verdant Works, Dundee, 2014.

04 Wednesday Mar 2015

Posted by Mr. B Flaneur in Souvenirs.

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Tags

Bangladesh, Bengal, British Industry, Dundee, India, Industrial Heritage, Industrial Revolution, jute, leaflet, Museums, Scotland's Jute Museum, Social history, Souvenirs, sticker, Ted, textiles, Verdant Works, Victorian., Victoriana

Expertly modelled by Ted.

Expertly modelled by Ted.

*Raspberry*

*Raspberry*.

Have you ever thought about jute? I had only considered the properties of jute once before my visit to Dundee. I was in Cambridge, walking around the open air market behind Great St. Mary’s Church and a short walk from King’s College Chapel, when my attention was caught by a stall on which everything was made of jute, which was haled as a renewable wonder material! Anyway – I didn’t think about jute again until I arrived in Dundee and asked a very helpful lady at Discovery Point, “Do you recommend any other visitor attraction in Dundee?” [or words to that effect]. She gave me a map and pointed me in the direction of the Verdant Works. To quote from the leaflet I still have, “Scotland’s Jute Museum @ Verdant Works is just one of the many mills that flourished when the jute industry was at its height. Verdant Works takes you on a tour of the trade, from its beginnings in the Indian subcontinent to the end product in all its myriad forms“.

In brief: The story of jute starts on the Indian Subcontinent, Bangladesh to be exact; formally Bengal. A number of enterprising, Victorian, individuals, had the bright idea of using their assets in the ship building, whaling, textile industries to bring the jute over to Dundee, soften it using whale oil and then turn it into sailcloth, sacking, ropes, tarpaulins and countless other things you would find in your very own home.

The Verdant Works is a very interesting place to visit. The museum covers all aspects of the subject, from the jutes cultivation to the finished product. Parts of the Works don’t look as if they’ve changed much [or have been restored] since 1900, so you get that feeling of walking back in time. The “From Fibre to Fabric” section has an extensive collection of working textile industry related machinery [it was all a bit over my head, but if you’re of a mechanic inclination I am sure you’ll love it]. The museum also covers the effect of the jute industry on the social history of Dundee, which is a very interesting topic; with special reference to the unique role of women in Dundee.

Photo Archive: Three Ladies Admiring A Bottle Kiln, Gladstone Pottery Museum, Longton, Stoke-on-Trent, c.2007.

24 Monday Nov 2014

Posted by Mr. B Flaneur in Photo Archive.

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Tags

bottle kiln, Gladstone Pottery, Gladstone Pottery Museum, Industrial Heritage, Longton., Museums, Pottery, Stoke-on-Trent

This one of my favourite photographs of anywhere I've visited.

This one of my favourite photographs.

It has been so long since I visited the Gladstone Pottery I’ve forgotten where I was standing when I took this photograph, but I appear to be looking down from a not inconsiderable height! I’m probably stood on some stairs, because I can’t see myself leaning out of a window.

If you would like a photograph with a better view of one of the Gladstone Pottery’s famous bottle kilns there is a link to one here, which I posted back in April: Photo Archive: Gladstone Pottery Museum, Longton, Stoke-on-Trent, c.2007.

 

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